A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

A rant on "national greatness" – again!

Andrew Bacevich, author of The New American Militarism, which I have touted repeatedly in these august pages, reviews Peter Beinart’s The Good Fight: Why Liberals – and Only Liberals – Can Win the War on Terror and Make America Great Again. Beinart, an erstwhile New Republic editor, argues for the resuscitation of muscular Cold War liberalism as the only kind of fighting faith that can effectively combat the new totalitarian menace of Islamic jihadism. Bacevich severely criticizes Beinart’s reading of history, and in particular his attempt to co-opt Reinhold Neibuhr as a patron saint of a new “national greatness” liberalism. Neibuhr, Bacevich points out, was deeply aware of the complexities of history and the perverse consequences that attended even the best-intentioned actions on the world stage. In Bacevich’s view, “[w]ere [Neibuhr] in our midst today, he would likely align himself with those dissidents on the left and the right who reject the conceits of the American Century and who view as profoundly dangerous the claims of both neoliberals and neoconservatives to understand history’s purpose and destination.”

Another conceit of both liberal hawks like Beinart and neoconservatives that I think needs to be critically examined is that Islamic terrorism does in fact represent a new totalitarianism which poses an existential threat to the USA, and the West more generally, on a par with Nazi Germany or Soviet Communism. This article, for instance, points out that many of the high profile al-Qaeda figures have turned out to be bumblers and losers and that we may have in fact blown the menace of al-Qaeda out of proportion. If anything, the author argues, our response to 9/11, especially the war in Iraq may have actually strenghtened what was essentially a fringe movement who managed to pull off one spectacularly horrifying attack. Another facet of this possible exaggeration of the threat we face are the perfervid fantasies about Islamic radicals actually taking over America and imposing sharia law on the populace. How exactly this is supposed to come about is never made terribly clear. (The number of firearms in America alone would seem to provide a pretty serious obstacle to such an outcome.)

For some reason, there are intellectuals who seem to want there to be some kind of grand existential conflict. In a recent interview, for instance, Christopher Hitchens, (former?) leftist and current Iraq war apologist out and out admitted that 9/11 was “exhilirating” for him because it pits everything he loves versus everything he hates and the conflict is so “interesting.” And even before 9/11, and kicking into high gear afterwards, there have been pundits on the right and left who longed for a project of “National Greatness,” an epoch-spanning mission that would allow us to display our virtue in bringing the blessings our Our Way of Life to the world (Recall Bill Clinton’s comment that he was actually kind of sorry the Cold War was over because there was no world crisis that really gave him a chance to shine. He had to settle for bombing backwaters like Sudan and Serbia. In other words: peace and prosperity is so boring!)

I’ve experessed myself on the whole “national greatness” idea before – here and here – and pretty much stand by everything I wrote then. I think what galls me the most about these projects of greatness that get cooked up by what passes for our public intellecutals is that they aren’t the ones who will shoulder the burden of their schemes. Christopher Hitchens may find it all exhilirating and interesting, but what about the Marine in Iraq who sees his buddy get blown up by an IED, or the young Pakistani who’s tortured at Gitmo and then later let go because he has no ties to terrorism, or the U.S. taxpayer footing the bill for the war in Iraq? Is the idea that the architects of our greatness will bask in the reflected glory of America while the costs are imposed on other people who don’t have much of a say?

Granted that, as Camassia recently pointed out, the line between legitimate self-defense and imperial expansion can appear fuzzy, it would help, I think, if we didn’t cloud things with vague abstractions like national greatness and dreams of a divinely sanctioned mission to save the world and instead tried to understand what would be a reasonable and prudent way of managing the threat of terrorism. In the terms of both classical Christian and classical liberal political theory, the political authorities are called to secure the conditions of earthly well-being so that society can function and the church can go about spreading her message. When this important, but limited, function is replaced by dreams of “greatness” the state can easily become a kind of ersatz savior instead of “God’s servant for your good.”

5 responses to “A rant on "national greatness" – again!”

  1. Where I disagree is that in an age of technology, bumblers and losers can wreak havoc. Put a rocket launcher in the hands of a loser, and you get what Israel endures on a daily basis. Nor do I believe that Sept. 11th was so much a lucky break in Al-Qaeda’s campaign.

    Of course, I also believe that many actions taken by the administration have helped protect the country from worsre attacks. Nothing so convinces people of the lack of a threat, as the inability of the enemy to make good on it.

  2. Yeah – you’re certainly right that even losers can wreak havoc, and I certainly don’t want to downplay 9/11 or deny that al-Qaeda is a real threat.

    But it seems to me that the threat is not proportionate to the rhetoric, especially the comparisons to the Cold War, WWII, etc. – threats to our very way of life and/or existence. And the rhetoric of war encourages a war-like response that is, IMO, not the most effective. I imagine that patient police work has probably done far more to prevent future terrorist attacks than, say, invading Iraq.

    In other words, what I think we need is a reconceptualization of the campaign against terrorism as a law enforcement issue rather than a war issue (though military strikes might occassionally be warranted). Of course I realize that, so far at least, that kind of thinking has had basically no traction politically.

  3. But it seems to me that the threat is not proportionate to the rhetoric, especially the comparisons to the Cold War, WWII, etc. – threats to our very way of life and/or existence.

    Again I disagree. Whatever the merit of the Iraq war, rising militancy among Islamist terrorists (militants, if one prefers) poses a threat everywhere, and the spread of certain technologies to the nations that support these terrorists (militants) directly impacts our very way of life and/or existence. Their goal is to instill fear, to make us live in fear of offending them. This militancy was rising before the Iraq war (Arabs rejoicing in the streets over 9/11 is a rather vivid memory). Such terrorists are sponsored by a number of governments — either openly, as in Syria’s sponsorship of Hamas, or covertly — and in this respect at least they constitute a method of waging war on another country while being able to claim peaceful intentions.

    With all the talk I’m hearing lately about American foreign policy being the root cause of this conflict, rather than Muslim* intolerance for the existence of Israel — or even Muslim intolerance for the existence of the West, considering their quickly-forgotten reaction to the Danish cartoons — coupled with romantic delusions about the merits of mass murder on a grand scale, I’d say they have impacted our way of life, and are making greater inroads all the time. Lately anti-Bushism and a reluctance to take responsibility for our actions carryies increasingly more influence with the national attitude than the fact that this is a serious problem that won’t go away. It’s a self-defeating testament to the success of Bush’s strategy that Americans (to say nothing of the rest of the world) express greater alarm at the Bush administration than about true threats to our way of life.

    *Of course this doesn’t apply to all Muslims, but I haven’t the foggiest idea what other word to use.

  4. In other words, what I think we need is a reconceptualization of the campaign against terrorism as a law enforcement issue rather than a war issue (though military strikes might occassionally be warranted). Of course I realize that, so far at least, that kind of thinking has had basically no traction politically.

    BTW — isn’t this exactly how terrorism was dealt with pre-9/11: a legal issue?

  5. I think one needs to distinguish between American foreign policy as a root cause of Muslim anger and an exacerbating cause. I think Islamic militancy is probably a complex phenomenon that has many causes, one of which is American involvement in the region. (Which would not justify terrorism, but it may help explain it.) It may be that we have good reasons for being involved there and that the benefits of that involvement outweigh the terrorist “blowback,” but, IMO, that’s something that should be subjected to dispassionate analysis rather than obfuscated with rhetoric about how virtuous we are and how much our enemies hate freedom.

    I do grant you that countries that foment terrorism against us should be subject to reprisals, but, again, the long-term consequences of doing that have to be weighed as well.

    And I agree that the “culture clash” (e.g the Danish cartoon)aspect of this needs to be addressed, but again, is that a problem that has a military solution? I’m all for the spread of liberal democratic values, but I’m not convinced that can be done by force.

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